Fictional Grandmother Reveals Need for Health Care Transparency

The net news was abuzz yesterday over a made-up grandmother shopping around for a new hip and the difficulties she faced in getting a price quoted over the phone for the surgery. The New York Times "Well Blog" summed it up rather nicely:
The quotes she received might surprise even hardened health care economists: only about half of the hospitals, including top-ranked orthopedic centers and community hospitals, could provide any sort of price estimate, despite repeated calls. Those that could gave quotes that varied by a factor of more than 10, from $11,100 to $125,798.
Predictably and justifiably, there is a call for transparency in pricing for health care services. But the more we do to insulate patients from the true cost of their treatment, the more we encourage hospitals to keep prices on a sliding scale that varies with their ability to pay.
Patients with health insurance and fixed copays have absolutely no incentive to shop around for "good value." Rather, they seek out the best possible care that will be covered by their insurance company. Meanwhile, hospitals have strong incentives to keep prices hidden and elevated so long as they draw the bulk of their water from the deep wells of the insurance companies.
The result is a total lack of transparency and the extraordinary inflation of health care costs that we have seen over the past twenty or so years. But we aren't just paying for this with greenbacks, it's killing us.
There are two ways to begin solving the problem. The first (and far more likely to be enacted in today's political climate) is a federal mandate requiring hospitals release up-to-date information on prices and quality measures like safety scores and accident rates, among others. This alone would encourage health insurance companies to do the research for us, "recommending" certain hospitals by refusing to cover procedures at those that don't measure up.
Another way-and one that would empower the consumer—is to reestablish a connection between who receives the care and who pays for it, at least in part. It's more possible and less draconian than it sounds. Singapore, for example, has a universal health care system that charges out-of-pocket fees for each and every service, discouraging wasteful "just-to-be-sure" visits and encouraging value-shopping.
Private versions of Singapore's health savings account system are already working well in the United States, and would be a cheaper alternative to Obamacare.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Another way-and one that would empower the consumer?is to reestablish a connection between who receives the care and who pays for it, at least in part.
You mean people should have to pay for healthcare services like they would pay for pants or shoes? Why that's crazy talk!
Agreed!
All of my friends from the UK keep reminding me that healthcare is a right!
Is it a right or a right right, ya know, unalienable and all that?
There are two ways to begin solving the problem.
Really? Only two ways? I smell an intern.
The first (and far more likely to be enacted in today's political climate) is a federal mandate
Uh, no. We have enough of those already.
Just one mandate/regulation/law away from Utopia, I tells ya.
My insurance was changed to an HSA a couple years ago. So once the fund is used up, the next few thousand comes out of pocket until the deductible finally kicks in.
Last week I went to a specialist for something relatively minor, and they wanted to do all kinds of "just in case" testing. I said no. They insisted. I got up to leave. At that point they relented and scheduled a time to do what I asked, as opposed to what they would normally charge to the insurance.
Finally getting the breast reduction or the penis enlargement?
Why can't it be both?
Because there isn't enough fat in my moobs to make injecting it into my penis worthwhile.
As a matter of fact... no.
Goiter removed? Gout treatment?
Nope on both counts. You were closer the first time.
I better stop guessing, I don't want any HIPAA violations.
One suspects both.
If I wasn't doing Epi's mom, I'd bitch about his fingers.
Where do you think my fingers just were?
The nimbleness is because of Warty's ass grease that he hasn't washed off yet, no doubt.
Permanent Santorum sounds horrible. I'd go with amputation, just to be sure.
It will be "interesting" to see what this Obamacare minimum coverage and expense ratio crap does to my HDHP/HSA plan.
I want to use insurance for catastrophes rather than maintenance and I doubt these pricks are going to let me keep doing that.
But if you like your insurance, you'll be able to keep it!
What Night Elf has isn't real insurance!
Thing is if you are a normal person with a reasonably average pattern of health care usage you are unlikely to ever pay out of pocket.
The average deductible for a HSA is somewhere around $8000 - $10,000 but the average family of 4 spends less than $2000 a year on Health Care. So if you fund your HSA at $4000 a year then in 5 years at most you have more in your HSA than the deductible and in general that total should only grow until you get into your late 50's or early 60's and your costs go up.
Clearly Grandma got the ten thousand dollar hip.
She was grafted onto a living goat.
That goat is sleepy.
Pass the Doritos.
Meanwhile, hospitals have strong incentives to keep prices hidden and elevated so long as they draw the bulk of their water from the deep wells of the insurance companies.
The what the Hell are those folks at the insurance companies doing? How has government screwed them up to the point of not giving a crap about costs? Maybe the automobile insurers need to hop over the cube wall and show them a thing or two.
It's not that insurance companies don't beat down providers on price. It's that the providers have no incentive to be competitive on price for any consumers that didn't come in through an insurance channel, because there's too few of those to matter.
That makes it a little less muddy.